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Understanding Beowulf As An Indoeuropean Epic A Study In Comparative Mythology Earl R Anderson

  • SKU: BELL-4656250
Understanding Beowulf As An Indoeuropean Epic A Study In Comparative Mythology Earl R Anderson
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Understanding Beowulf As An Indoeuropean Epic A Study In Comparative Mythology Earl R Anderson instant download after payment.

Publisher: Edwin Mellen Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 18.79 MB
Pages: 607
Author: Earl R. Anderson, Mary P. Richards
ISBN: 9780773437555, 077343755X
Language: English
Year: 2010

Product desciption

Understanding Beowulf As An Indoeuropean Epic A Study In Comparative Mythology Earl R Anderson by Earl R. Anderson, Mary P. Richards 9780773437555, 077343755X instant download after payment.

This monograph is the first book-length comprehensive textual analysis of the Beowulf saga as an Indo-European epic. It provides a detailed reading of the epic in conjunction with ancient legal and cultural practices that allow for a new understanding of this classic work. This theoretical resource offers insights valuable to the fields of comparative mythology, medieval literature and Anglo-Saxon studies. This book is accessible to students, but will interest scholars in Anglo-Saxon, Germany, Indo-European, and comparative epic studies. When Beowulf is read in the context of Indo-European and Middle Eastern epic traditions, its characters appear in bono, rather than as ironic figures who undermine the heroic ethos. Hro-gar, a wise king, chooses Beowulf as the champion most likely to defeat Grendel and his mother. He adopts Beowulf as his son, possibly in a vain effort to protect Heorot from a feud with Ingeld. Beowulf defeats Grendel by means of a combative handshake; Hondscioh's death is an unintended consequence of this strategy. Hygelac's expedition in Frisia, a Cadmean victory, is a preemptive strike against Merovingian aggression. Beowulf rightly acquires the dragon's treasure for his people, but after his death, Wiglaf wrongfully keeps it from them. These and other episodes are interpreted in light of cross-cultural, migratory typescenes and themes in epic tradition. Anderson's approach contrasts sharply with nativist, ironic, and nominalist readings of Beowulf that are current in the critical literature.

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